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Andrew Brown shooting: anger as family shown only ‘snippet’ of police footage

<span>Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA</span>
Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA

Lawyers representing the family of Andrew Brown, a Black man shot and killed by police in North Carolina last week, accused authorities of “hiding” video evidence of “an execution” on Monday after relatives were shown only a 20-second clip of the incident from a single officer’s body camera.

Anger boiled over at an afternoon press conference in which they said the snippet they were permitted to view showed Brown, 42, with his hands on the steering wheel of the car he was driving when he was shot dead in a hail of police bullets. One of the lawyers, Harry Daniels, said Brown was shot in the back of the head.

“My dad got executed just trying to save his own life,” Khalil Ferebee, Brown’s son, told the briefing in Elizabeth City, a town in the north-east of the state with a population of about 18,000, about half of them Black.

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“It’s messed up how this happened. It ain’t right. It ain’t right at all.”

Protesters were gathering in the city on Monday evening.

Related: Andrew Brown shooting: family describe him as a loving father with a sense of humor

The family’s lawyers had emerged from the viewing of the selected footage arranged by the authorities, but much delayed on Monday, amid growing tension.

They stood and spoke alongside family members, saying there had been a heated disagreement with county officials over their lack of transparency.

“One bodycam, 20 seconds, an execution … we still cannot get justice and accountability,” Bakari Sellers, one of the attorneys, said.

Another lawyer, Chantel Cherry-Lassiter, said there were “at least eight officers there but we only saw [footage from] one body camera, we did not see any dashcam.”

Police were already firing at Brown when the clip began, she said, crowding his car with handguns and assault rifles drawn.

“The car was riddled with bullets. They’re shooting and saying let me see your hands at the same time,” she said, adding that she had seen Bushmaster assault rifles and Glock pistols wielded by the assembled officers.

“This was an execution. He had his hands on the steering wheel, he was not reaching for anything.”

The numbers of police officers present, cameras, bullets fired and other details remain unconfirmed.

Brown’s family had been bracing themselves for the viewing of body-camera footage on Monday morning, only for it to be delayed for several hours while authorities blurred out the faces of the officers, according to Michael Cox, the Pasquotank county attorney.

Cox came under attack from the civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is also representing the Brown family, on Monday afternoon.

“Why is it they get to choose what are the pertinent parts [of the footage] to show? At the last minute they decided they are going to redact it?” said Crump, who also represented the family of George Floyd in Minnesota.

“They are trying to hide something. They don’t want us to see everything.”

Protesters gather outside the Pasquotank county sheriff’s Office to call for the release of the body cam footage of the police killing of Andrew Brown in Elizabeth City, 26 April.
Protesters gather outside the Pasquotank county sheriff’s Office to call for the release of the body cam footage of the police killing of Andrew Brown in Elizabeth City, 26 April. Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA

Crump said he believed up to nine body cams were available, plus footage from at least one police dashboard camera, and a camera on a lamp-post. The attorneys, he said, should have seen all of it: “That’s what transparency is, let us see with our own eyes. Where’s that written in the statute that the family doesn’t have the right to see the entire video?”

Related: Andrew Brown shooting: seven North Carolina deputies placed on leave

Sellers said there had also been disagreement between Cox and the Pasquotank sheriff, Tommy Wooten, over the release.

“The sheriff’s perspective was he wanted the family to be able to see the video today,” he said. “[But] all these decisions were made by the county.”

According to an eyewitness, deputies fired at Brown as he tried to drive away from officers executing a drugs warrant. Dispatch audio was captured in which a first responder can be heard saying: “Be advised EMS has one male, 42 years of age, gunshot to the back.”

Brown died after seven officers including a tactical team were deployed to his house to serve the search and arrest warrant. Not all of the officers discharged their weapons, but seven have been placed on leave.

Local leaders have urged calm and patience amid protests surrounding the killing. Lloyd Griffin, the chair of the commissioners of Pasquotank county, said: “Rushing the gathering of evidence and interviewing of witnesses would hurt any future legal case that might be brought in the wake of this tragedy.”

Lawyers said that patience was running out. Sellers told Monday’s press conference: “I wish we were somewhere else. I wish we had a week where Black folk weren’t just dying at the hands of law enforcement. The state of North Carolina can no longer hide videos from the people who need to see them.”

Crump addressed the indications that Brown was shot in the back. “The most cowardly thing in the world you can do is shoot somebody in the back. They don’t shoot white men in the back. They shoot us in the back. The most dangerous thing to a police officer in America is a black man running away,” he said.

At the weekend, the Rev William Barber of the Poor People’s Campaign called for the footage to be made public.

“We’re sick and tired of all these deaths happening that don’t have to happen,” he said. “Release the tapes!”